Mental Health Shark Tank

Mental Health Shark Tank

Question: In the Book of Woe, Gary Greenberg offers a stinging intellectual critique of the DSM-5, and of psychiatric diagnosis more generally. In Insane, Alisa Roth details the mental health crisis that is raging across Americas courts, jails and prisons.

Your Challenge: Help Solve Americas Health Crisis.

In part one of your essay, drawing both on BOW and ACT, please make 7 specific suggestions for how we might use research to improve one or more aspects of mental health treatment.  Elaborate each research suggestion sufficiently so the reader can tell what it would entail. In your response, be sure you clearly explain how it connects to material in BOW and/or ACT (use chapter or page references to solidify these links).

In part two your essay, imagine that you are part of a research organization (like a university or foundation). Your goal is to develop a project that will allow you to conduct research on 1 of your 7 suggestions to improve mental health treatment. The only problem is that you need money to make this project a reality. You have been invited to make a shark tank like presentation of your idea to Bill Gates. Bill Gates, through the Gates Foundation, has become passionate about spending his fortune to fund mental health research. He will provide a budget of up to $5 million dollars for any research project that has the potential to improve mental health treatment (this money can be spent on salaries for researchers, equipment, paying participants, etc). Gates will only be able to fund the best 5 projects from more than a 100 applicants. To be successful, your presentation must connect to Gates’ core concerns.

Reminders:

*Mr. Gates is a practical man so he will want to be sure that the money will be well spent.

*At the same time, Mr. Gates is a visionary, so he will also be interested in your larger overall vision.

*You’ll want to make sure that Mr. Gates understands how your work will benefit psychology and society (including the people who struggle with mental health problems).

*Mr. Gates does not have a lot of time so try to get to the bottom lines quickly.

In sum, in your brief speech, outline how you will accomplish your goals and convince Mr. Gates that your research program is an exciting and worthwhile investment.

*In doing so, please draw upon BOW, ACT and all of your knowledge learned in this course.

Outside sources are welcomed, but they are absolutely not required

Format:

Length:  9 to 10 double-spaced pages for your text.

12-point type and normal margins.

Do not include a separate title page

Use parenthetical references for all references to BOW and ACT .

If you use outside sources, please include an additional reference page.

Grading Criteria:

Papers will be evaluated on: a) correctness of format (e.g., length, following assignment instructions for space allocations; b) writing quality (grammar, clarity, organization);  c) quality, coherence and persuasiveness of the 7 suggestions; d) how well you use both BOW and ACT to support your 7 suggestions; e) quality, coherence, and persuasiveness of the shark tank proposal and f) how well other knowledge learned in the course is integrated into the essay.

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Knowing How and What to Research in you College Essays

Research is the part of the writing process that most people dread, but a lot of that is because they are looking at research in the wrong light. The whole process has been labeled as the boring part of writing. But what if it was considered as something fun, something that everyone loves doing all the time? When you really think about research, it’s just a formal form of foreplay. It’s getting to know the topic before getting down and dirty with it. It could be considered the most exciting part of the writing process if people just gave it a chance. Hopefully, the tips below can help you see research in this sexy new light, and then you can apply my theories to the research you have to do for your supply chain management degree.
How Many Sources Do You Need?
If you start thinking about research in a fun and exciting way, the whole process seems to go a lot faster. The problem that a lot of people have is that they don’t know when to stop researching or they don’t do enough research before they start writing. It’s a difficult balance, but there are some rules of thumb that you can consider.
If a person is writing a short essay (probably 1000 words or less), then all he needs is three good sources to provide the information that you need. One source isn’t sufficient because he would be basing all of his knowledge on one other person’s opinions. If he uses two sources, then he runs into the problem of getting two vastly different versions of the same information. That’s where the third source comes in. It acts as a tiebreaker between the two and allows the writer to pick a majority opinion to base his information on. Sure this isn’t a foolproof system, but if someone isn’t writing a huge essay, there’s no sense in doing more research than necessary.
Obviously, the larger the essay that a person needs to write is, the more research that he’ll have to do. A ten-page paper can’t be based on three small sources. There just isn’t enough information to work with. For multi-page essays, one can assume that you’ll need one to two resources per page of text. A five page paper needs anywhere from five to ten resources, depending on the subject. Just like the other rule, this doesn’t work for every essay. If someone isn’t very knowledgeable about the subject you’re writing about or if the topic covers a wide range of subjects, you would have to do more research than you would on a narrow subject that he was familiar with. If you feel like you don’t have enough information, then the best solution is to research some more. No one will complain that you know too much about a subject.
What Sources Do You Need?
In terms of what you need to research, you will, of course, need to find sources that fit the topic you are about. You also need to make sure that you are getting your information from an accredited source that is an authority on the subject. It’s important to try to find sources that don’t seem too biased. If most of the sources are biased, then you need to make sure that you get sources from both sides of the argument. This will let you form your own conclusions and have a well-rounded opinion on the topic. Most people will say to avoid internet sources, but as long as the information comes from knowledgeable authors or companies, there shouldn’t be any problems.
Final Words
Still, the best thing to do when researching is to think about it in the right way from the start. Stop dreading the research process and embrace it as something fun and exciting. If a writer is eager to learn about a given subject, he is a lot more likely to fully grasp the information. As long as he follows some basic rules of thumb along the way, he’ll be finished in no time. So go out there–learn, explore, and search every corner of the world for information. Just be sure to start off having a little bit of fun.

Assessment 1 instructions: preliminary care coordination plan

Develop a 3-4-page preliminary care coordination plan for an individual in your community with whom you choose to work. Identify and list available community resources for a safe and effective continuum of care.

NOTE: You are required to complete this assessment before Assessment 4.

The first step in any effective project or clinical patient encounter is planning. This assessment provides an opportunity for you to strengthen your understanding of how to plan and negotiate the coordination of care for an individual in your community as you consider the patient’s unique needs; the ethical, cultural, and physiological factors that affect care; and the critical resources available in your community that are the foundation of a safe plan for the continuum of care.

As you begin to prepare this assessment, you are encouraged to complete the Care Coordination Planning activity. Completion of this will provide useful practice, particularly for those of you who do not have care coordination experience in community settings. The information gained from completing this activity will help you succeed with the assessment. Completing formatives is also a way to demonstrate engagement.

Demonstration of Proficiency

By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the course competencies through the following assessment scoring guide criteria:

  • Competency 1: Adapt care based on patient-centered and person-focused factors.     
    • Analyze a health concern and the associated best practices for health improvement.
  • Competency 2: Collaborate with patients and family to achieve desired outcomes.     
    • Establish mutually agreed-upon health goals for a care coordination plan, in collaboration with the patient.
  • Competency 3: Create a satisfying patient experience.     
    • Identify available community resources for a safe and effective continuum of care.
  • Competency 6: Apply professional, scholarly communication strategies to lead patient-centered care.     
    • Write clearly and concisely in a logically coherent and appropriate form and style.

Preparation

Imagine that you are a staff nurse in a community care center. Your facility has always had a dedicated case management staff that coordinated the patient plan of care, but recently, there were budget cuts and the case management staff has been relocated to the inpatient setting. Care coordination is essential to the success of effectively managing patients in the community setting, so you have been asked by your nurse manager to take on the role of care coordination. You are a bit unsure of the process, but you know you will do a good job because, as a nurse, you are familiar with difficult tasks. As you take on this expanded role, you will need to plan effectively in addressing the specific health concerns of community residents.

As you assume your expanded care coordination role, you have been tasked with addressing the specific health concerns of a particular individual within the community. You decide to prepare a preliminary care coordination plan and proceed by identifying the patient’s three priorities for health and by investigating the resources available in your community for a safe and effective continuum of care.

To prepare for this assessment, you may wish to:

  • Review the assessment instructions and scoring guide to ensure that you understand the work you will be asked to complete.
  • Allow plenty of time to plan your patient clinical encounter.
  • Be sure that you have a patient in mind that you can work with throughout the course.

Note: Remember that you can submit all, or a portion of, your draft plan to Smarthinking Tutoring for feedback, before you submit the final version for this assessment. If you plan on using this free service, be mindful of the turnaround time of 24–48 hours for receiving feedback.

Instructions

Note: You are required to complete this assessment before Assessment 4.

This assessment has two parts.

Part 1: Develop the Preliminary Care Coordination Plan

Complete the following:

  • Identify a health concern as the focus of your care coordination plan. Possible health concerns may include, but are not limited to:     
    • Stroke.
    • Heart disease (high blood pressure, stroke, or heart failure).
    • Home safety.
    • Pulmonary disease (COPD or fibrotic lung disease).
    • Orthopedic concerns (hip replacement or knee replacement).
    • Cognitive impairment (Alzheimer’s disease or dementia).
    • Pain management.
    • Mental health.
    • Trauma.
  • Identify available community resources for a safe and effective continuum of care.
Part 2: Secure Individual Participation in the Activity

Complete the following:

  • Contact local individuals who may be open to an interview and a care coordination plan addressing their health concerns. The person you choose to work with may be a colleague, community member, friend, or family member.
  • Meet with the individual to describe the care coordination plan session that you intend to provide. Collaborate with the participant in setting goals for the session, evaluating session outcomes, and suggesting possible revisions to the plan.
  • Establish a tentative date and time for the care coordination plan session. Document the name of the individual and a single point of contact, either an e-mail address or a phone number.
Document Format and Length

For your care coordination plan, you may use the Care Coordination Plan Template [DOCX], choose a format used in your own organization, or choose a format you are familiar with that adequately serves your needs for this assessment.

  • Your preliminary plan should be 3–4 pages in length. In a separate section of the plan, identify the person you have chosen to work with, and be sure to include his or her contact information.
  • Document the community resources you have identified using the Community Resources Template [DOCX].
Supporting Evidence

Cite at least two credible sources from peer-reviewed journals or professional industry publications that support your preliminary plan.

Grading Requirements

The requirements, outlined below, correspond to the grading criteria in the Preliminary Care Coordination Plan Scoring Guide, so be sure to address each point. Read the performance-level descriptions for each criterion to see how your work will be assessed.

  • Analyze your selected health concern and the associated best practices for health improvement.     
    • Cite supporting evidence for best practices.
    • Consider underlying assumptions and points of uncertainty in your analysis.
  • Establish mutually agreed-upon health goals for the care coordination plan, in collaboration with the selected individual.
  • Identify available community resources for a safe and effective continuum of care.
  • Write clearly and concisely in a logically coherent and appropriate form and style.     
    • Write with a specific purpose with your patient in mind.
    • Adhere to scholarly and disciplinary writing standards and current APA formatting requirements.
Additional Requirements

Before submitting your assessment, proofread your preliminary care coordination plan and community resources list to minimize errors that could distract readers and make it more difficult for them to focus on the substance of your plan. Be sure to submit both documents.

CORE ELMS

Important note: The time you spend securing individual participation in this activity and the time you spend presenting your final care coordination plan to the patient in Assessment 4 must total at least three hours. Be sure to log your time in the CORE ELMS system. The CORE ELMS link is located in the courseroom navigation menu.

Portfolio Prompt: Save your presentation to your ePortfolio. Submissions to the ePortfolio will be part of your final Capstone course.

Mental Health Shark Tank

Mental Health Shark Tank

Question: In the Book of Woe, Gary Greenberg offers a stinging intellectual critique of the DSM-5, and of psychiatric diagnosis more generally. In Insane, Alisa Roth details the mental health crisis that is raging across Americas courts, jails and prisons.

Your Challenge: Help Solve Americas Health Crisis.

In part one of your essay, drawing both on BOW and ACT, please make 7 specific suggestions for how we might use research to improve one or more aspects of mental health treatment.  Elaborate each research suggestion sufficiently so the reader can tell what it would entail. In your response, be sure you clearly explain how it connects to material in BOW and/or ACT (use chapter or page references to solidify these links).

In part two your essay, imagine that you are part of a research organization (like a university or foundation). Your goal is to develop a project that will allow you to conduct research on 1 of your 7 suggestions to improve mental health treatment. The only problem is that you need money to make this project a reality. You have been invited to make a shark tank like presentation of your idea to Bill Gates. Bill Gates, through the Gates Foundation, has become passionate about spending his fortune to fund mental health research. He will provide a budget of up to $5 million dollars for any research project that has the potential to improve mental health treatment (this money can be spent on salaries for researchers, equipment, paying participants, etc). Gates will only be able to fund the best 5 projects from more than a 100 applicants. To be successful, your presentation must connect to Gates’ core concerns.

Reminders:

*Mr. Gates is a practical man so he will want to be sure that the money will be well spent.

*At the same time, Mr. Gates is a visionary, so he will also be interested in your larger overall vision.

*You’ll want to make sure that Mr. Gates understands how your work will benefit psychology and society (including the people who struggle with mental health problems).

*Mr. Gates does not have a lot of time so try to get to the bottom lines quickly.

In sum, in your brief speech, outline how you will accomplish your goals and convince Mr. Gates that your research program is an exciting and worthwhile investment.

*In doing so, please draw upon BOW, ACT and all of your knowledge learned in this course.

Outside sources are welcomed, but they are absolutely not required

Format:

Length:  9 to 10 double-spaced pages for your text.

12-point type and normal margins.

Do not include a separate title page

Use parenthetical references for all references to BOW and ACT .

If you use outside sources, please include an additional reference page.

Grading Criteria:

Papers will be evaluated on: a) correctness of format (e.g., length, following assignment instructions for space allocations; b) writing quality (grammar, clarity, organization);  c) quality, coherence and persuasiveness of the 7 suggestions; d) how well you use both BOW and ACT to support your 7 suggestions; e) quality, coherence, and persuasiveness of the shark tank proposal and f) how well other knowledge learned in the course is integrated into the essay.